Simulated climatically disturbed emergence of agricultures in Western Eurasia 8500-3000 BC


Autoria(s): Lemmen, Carsten; Wirtz, Kai W
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 44.000000 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 16.000000 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 31.000000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -10.000000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 57.000000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 42.000000 * MINIMUM ELEVATION: -400.0 m * MAXIMUM ELEVATION: 4000.0 m

Data(s)

20/04/2012

Resumo

Was the spread of agropastoralism from the Fertile Crescent throughout Europe influenced by rapid climatic shifts? We here generate idealized climate events using palaeoclimate records. In a mathematical model of regional sociocultural development, these events disturb the subsistence base of simulated forager and farmer societies. We evaluate the regional simulated transition timings and durations against a published large set of radiocarbon dates for western Eurasia; the model is able to realistically hindcast much of the inhomogeneous space-time evolution of regional Neolithic transitions. Our study shows that the inclusion of climate events improves the simulation of typical lags between cultural complexes, but that the overall difference to a model without climate events is not significant. Climate events may not have been as important for early sociocultural dynamics as endogenous factors.

Formato

application/x-gzip, 681.0 kBytes

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.779660

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779660

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Lemmen, Carsten; Wirtz, Kai W (2012): On the sensitivity of the simulated European Neolithic transition to climate extremes. (PDI-1941), Journal of Archaeological Science, submitted

Palavras-Chave #GLUES_LBK; Integrierte Analyse zwischeneiszeitlicher Klimadynamik; INTERDYNAMIK; Model; Model version 1.1.18; western Eurasia
Tipo

Dataset